Science

Studio8 Design

Studio8 Design

I read a lot. Like to the point where the people around me know not to take me into a bookstore, because I will spend too much without blinking an eye, and then there’s the inevitable cold truth stage where I feel sick for having spent that much. Then I’m reading and everything is ok…until I finish all those books. I am the reading equivalent of the fat guy with indigestion and diabetes. All that is just to say that I’m as qualified as the next guy to say “this is a good looking book.” Well, in the case of Studio8 Design’s Wonders of the Solar System, I can say that “this is a good looking book.” Well organized, perfect design, great information architecture, and full of cool information. If you don’t think that our solar system is cool, then you came to the wrong place. The wrong place being this solar system. I was gonna make a “go back to the Horsehead Nebula” joke, but you know what? I’m not gonna bother. Space is fucking rad, including the Horsehead Nebula. This book just proves that it can be even better when presented with some beautiful design to back it up. Studio8 Design, that is a good looking book, and I’ll be sure to buy it if I can ever convince my friends to let go into a bookstore again.

Studio8 Design

Books
Design
Science

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Learn Good

Learn Good
In lieu of new Daily Video links today (I’ll leave yesterday’s up), I’ve decided to do a post on some interesting video sources. The key to this post is that I like to learn. No, I love to learn. I can’t stop myself. The internet, in it’s ever-evolving attempts to disseminate knowledge to the far corners of the Earth, has brought to my attention a few excellent resources for learning more than you could ever want to know about the world and the ideas that shape it. Check out my short list after the jump.
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Everything
Philosophy
Politics
Science

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Oliver Jeffers

Oliver Jeffers
I’m gonna have to drop some more apology bombs on the crew over at It’s Nice that for ganking one of their posted artists, but Oliver Jeffers was just too good to pass up. He combines two of my favorite things — painting and math — together into works that feel similar to Magritte even though they don’t quite cross that line into out-and-out surrealism. At least, I don’t see them that way. And of course if you’ve got the science/math background to understand what the equations in some of his paintings are, it adds a new level of depth to each piece. Even without knowing the equations each piece still manages to demonstrate how beautiful the math looks. That’s one of the reasons I ever bothered to learn it in the first place; all the numbers and symbols just flow together so nicely. Well, that and I get really awestruck when I see the underpinnings of the world described in symbols. I am awestruck like 90% of the day though, so maybe that’s not such a big thing.

Oliver Jeffers found via It’s Nice that

Art
Painting
Science

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Science as Art

I know that I often have a strange mix of art and science posts throughout the week, even though I generally consider this an art/design site. That’s because I honestly can’t see the difference between the two. I love art and design because they allow me to see joy and beauty in the world, and I love science for the very same reason. Everything I learn, every new discovery I read about, just serves to make the world seem that much more beautiful and intricate. Did you know that bats create tiny vortexes on top of their wings? That was just discovered recently. I react to that in the same way that I react to the first Goya painting I ever saw in person. It makes me want to shout, because I don’t know what else would be a strong enough reaction to that kind of joy. I pretty much feel like shouting all the time.

The most amazing parts of my week are the moments when I find something that blurs the line of art and science in a way that everyone else can understand how I feel when I look at clouds. Recently I came across two such things, and I figured they warranted a nice long post to themselves.


The first is an image gallery on the website of Aqua Design Amano for Aqua Forest Aquarium (a Bay Area business that I’ll be visiting very soon). The images are all of simple, glass aquariums. The beauty comes from the design of the aquarium environment, an “amano” style. Each tank is designed to be a natural, aqueous environment for plants and animals. This is basically the aquarium version of bonzai. Each element, and there are never very many, is delicately placed with respect to its height, relation to other plants, and overall effect on the sense of perspective in the tank. Then fish are added, usually one species to maintain simplicity. The CO2 levels are very carefully maintained, and the light sources are designed for maximum plant growth, as well as light for viewing the environment. The photos are great, but imagine seeing the tanks in person. Tell me that’s not art.


The second item I came across is the flickr page of Reciprocity. He creates the most amazing images using shaped and textured plastics. Each image is shot using a focused light beam aimed through the plastic object. The lens of the camera is removed and replaced with the object so that the light pattern is captured directly on 35mm film. The images change with the shapes, textures and colors of the plastic, and the colors and intensity of the light. Each image comes out looking like some multi-colored photo of microscopic organisms or maybe the smoke from some Lewis Carroll caterpillar. Refraction and reflection, spectra of light, texture, all scientific realms, but here their captured as beautiful images. Tell me that’s not art.

Every structure, every pattern, every tiny scientific fact that I encounter in the world adds depth to my life, and the way that I view the world. Art and science enrich everything around me to a degree that is indescribable. I hope I’ve managed to capture a small part of that here.

Art
Photography
Science

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Periodic Table Printmaking Project


Nerds and graphic designers (redundant?) alike will enjoy this nice little project. 96 printmakers created 118 prints, each one representing an element on the periodic table of elements. Some really great work, and a nice way to get non-science buffs interested in one of the most important data tables in history.

The 2007 Periodic Table of Elements Printmaking Project

Art
Design
Illustration
Science

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What is the Singularity

It was brought to my attention that some of you, and you know who you are, skip over the science and technology posts that I write. Too bad for you, because The Girl sent me a great link this morning to The Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence. What does this organization do, what are they about? Making humans smarter through the use of technology. Simple. But read their overview and you’ll realize that it’s a little bit more complex. I wonder if their hiring. That would be a pretty sweet gig, thinking about the philosophy of AI.

The Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence

Science
Technology

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The New Black

Scientists have recently created the darkest material on Earth, a material that absorbs 99.9 percent of light. The key is to understand that it doesn’t reflect any light, but it also absorbs a lot of light. Both are important to make the darkest material. This new guy is made of carbon nano-tubes, all standing on end, and with irregular exposed surfaces. It’s 30 times darker than the current standard for blackness. The only thing you can see when you stare into this new dark is the reflection of your own soul looking back. Sorry, all the talk about blackness got me feeling a little goth.

The New Black

Science
Technology

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Color Blindness


If you’ve ever wanted to see what the world looks like to a color blind person there is a great post on Critique Wall. My dad is red/green color blind so this is pretty enlightening. My uncle has a much rarer form of complete color blindness, can’t see any colors at all.

Color Blindness

Design
Science

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Unified Theory


Calling this guy a dude just because he surfs and says “cool” is like calling Feynman a beatnik because he played the bongos. They don’t really explain anything about Lisi’s theory either, but it’s a nice intro into what could be the next theoretical revolution. The image is of an E8 polytope (not that the Telegraph mentions that either), which is an example of the mathematical framework that Lisi uses in his theory. Sort of. I’m not going to butcher the theory by trying to explain it when I don’t fully understand it yet. Unlike some new repositories, Telegraph, I like to report mostly things that are true and accurate.

Telegraph’s crappy article on Lisi’s theory.

The Theory itself

An animation of the theory. This is just so you can see what kind of beautiful things come out of this theory.

Science

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Nano Nurses


Apparently scientists have made some giant leaps in creating nanobots to live in your body and keep you healthy/immortal. That’s a plus for those of us who find that keeping ourselves immortal takes too much time and energy, but a minus for those of us who don’t want unstoppable robots to be in control of our internal organs. They’ve finally managed to convince us that we should let them live inside us. Well played, robots. You’ve won this round.

Note this sentence: The robot ‘motor’ is grafted heart muscle that is powered by sugars within the patient’s blood thereby foregoing the need for a cumbersome external power supply.

AWHUUUUUUUU?!!

Pictured is a nanobot preparing to boil your heart with its eye lasers because you drank too much kool-aid.

Read the short article here

Science
Technology
Weird

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